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avestin View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 29 2006 at 09:01
Thanks for the info Rocktopus.
More French stuff for me to discover.

When I will visit again my family in France some time in the future, I will definitely go album hunting in Paris (Maybe drag along Alucard as he probably knows best where to get the goodies...).


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 29 2006 at 10:25

Seasons greetings!

There is a cracking little record shop in Ledru-Rollin (near to Bastille) whose name escapes me. Lots of rare krautrock and prog.

About 2 minutes from the old Rough Trade shop. Also near a very tidy Vietnamese restaurant (since banned). Their Chardonnay made me regress in time and imagine that I had become a Marcel Ducschamp fixated Alain Prost impostering as a painter/decorator with a serious Jackson Pollock complex.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 31 2006 at 07:40

良いお年を!
Happy New Year!



Happy 2007 to one an' all! One is completely

The image “http://www.theviolinsite.com/composers/brahms.jpg” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.

an'

http://www.grottammare.com/img/liszt.jpg

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 31 2006 at 09:58
Happy New Year to you Yuko and to all other members here!

Yuko, I received this week something you might be interested in:

Speed Limit - s/t

Look



See the lineup?

I also bought Troisieme Rive - Banlieues, Memoriance - L'Ecume Des Jours, Arachnoid and Dun (finally to change the mp3's).

I will purchase more French goodies in January (Oniris, Chene Noir, Komintern etc).



    

Edited by avestin - December 31 2006 at 09:58
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 02 2007 at 20:02
Beautiful painting on the cover!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 02 2007 at 20:03
BTW, I found this article that might be very interesting. It's in French, so I don't understand much of it myself, but a lot of RIO/Zeuhl bands are mentioned, as well as other experimental rock groups:

http://carnetsnoirs.free.fr/bonus/cn_grandsanciens.pdf

(I also posted this in the RIO Drop-In Centre.)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 03 2007 at 00:13
So, Janik Top plays the Fuzz Phaser eh'.





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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 07 2007 at 13:47
Originally posted by avestin avestin wrote:


 


See the lineup?


Wow avers! I see! Where did you dig this up? On my most wanted list. cd reissue?

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 07 2007 at 13:50
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 07 2007 at 13:51
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 07 2007 at 13:52
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 07 2007 at 13:53
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 07 2007 at 14:06
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 07 2007 at 14:07
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 07 2007 at 14:08

Help a brother out heh!

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 16 2007 at 16:08
From that insanely long list I'm currently obsessed with Igor Wakhevitch

Igor Wakhevitch was an obscure French composer who apparently took pleasure in messing with peoples’ heads. He had studied with Terry Riley, Olivier Messiaen and famed stage director Pierre Schaeffer, as well as having ties with the Soft Machine and Salvador Dali. I would say that his very odd mastery of noise, experimental classical and synthesizer technology was none too compromised by his mental state.



Logos '70 (debut)
With such a background, and a concept based on Greek legend, Logos "Rituel Sonore" amounted to a revolutionary creation for a 1970 release. Even if you know works like Pierre Henry’s The Green Queen, which was weirdly comprised of rock and avant-garde musics fused together, you’ll still be in for a surprise. Here we have a soprano singer, strange orchestral textures and percussives (drums, cymbals, gongs, etc.) blended with effects and processing. As the ominous percussion sets off with drum-rolls and ritualistic tension, the mood is of a looming anticipation of what is to come. here we go through phases of weird swirling effects, vivid reverb and atmosphere. The tension becomes overpowering, yet we are led on. Here we have the key to Igir Wakhévitch’s sound, in a tension that becomes awe-inspiring.
The climax of the whole opus comes with "Danse Sacrale" , an extraordinary psychedelic instrumental performed by Triangle (one of the earliest French psychedelic bands) that has to be heard to be believed. A great band in their early days, this goes to prove that Triangle were not just Pink Floyd cum Traffic copyists. This all amounts to a unique fusing of psychedelia and the avant-garde, and an awesome experience !




Docteur Faust '71

-This is the most obscure album of the lot. I’d never hit it before this release. Aptly in tune with the title, it is also one of the strangest. Docteur Faust was created for a festival in Avignon, and was later choreographed. Though, the mind boggles as to how anyone could dance to this. "Full of fury and energy" to quote a reviewer at the Avignon festival, it certainly is !
On one hands this is a more balanced blending of classical and dramatic musics, yet also it is much more extreme. There’s a wealth of sonic collage, dense musique-concrete, and bizarre musics that collide and fragment against rock structures. There’s also moments of pure classical avant-garde moving into ensemble pieces feeling like Henze meets Ligeti or Xenakis. The use of electronics is really vivid too. There are no rules or boundaries in what makes up a Wakhévitch composition ! The rock elements return throughout this album and, although not credited, I would guess that again Triangle members are featured. The guitar reminds of Alain Renaud, and percussion is quite distinctive, backed-up with weirdly treated organ. Although a short album, it is so engrossing and weird that it would be too-much if it were much longer.





Hathor '73
Dating from 1973, shortly after working with Terry Riley on his Happy Ending soundtrack,
there’s an obvious big advance in Hathor "Lithurgie du Souffle Pour la Résurrection des Morts", with greater use of keyboards, synthesizers, and looping techniques. But Hathor is no mere synth album, far from it, but is Igor Wakhévitch’s most powerful opus. Making use of the Paris Opera choir (no-less), along with weirdly processed vocals, his usual off-the-wall electronics, and even drum/sequencer drives unprecedented in any form of music before this. It’s another sonic roller-coaster ride, in which we experience an ominous bellowing God-like voice heralding something visionary.
As with his previous albums, Hathor contains a number of separate tracks that continue or segue from each other, amounting to what feels like one work. Here, we have surging electronic and percussion drives, a climax sparked off by lightning, thunder-crashes, a wealth of weird contorted voices, and much much more. Here tension gives way to intense power resulting in a kind of dark Vangelis - on the edge ! With a weird Gothic choral number and another electronic rock opus to follow Hathor really flies ! Only the closing coda offers relief, with a reflection on obvious Terry Riley influences, and hinting at the albums to come.
All text is taken from Fractal Records


I have his four first albums. (Fourth being a completly avantgarde piece for written for ballet called:  Les Fous d’Or) Avantgarde, Progressive Electronic, Krautrock and occult mass in one. Especially these three has enough prog(rock) relation to be considered here. My current favorite composer. Not as difficult as it may look. Lots of dark beauty, and plenty og melody and quite a bit of rock. 
Over land and under ashes
In the sunlight, see - it flashes
Find a fly and eat his eye
But don't believe in me
Don't believe in me
Don't believe in me
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 17 2007 at 05:19
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 17 2007 at 17:10
Over land and under ashes
In the sunlight, see - it flashes
Find a fly and eat his eye
But don't believe in me
Don't believe in me
Don't believe in me
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 17 2007 at 17:15
Originally posted by Rocktopus Rocktopus wrote:


Rocktopus, I'm definitely going to have check out some
<a>Igor Wakhevitch, sounds like my area of music.

It is. Pm me (btw:you're full)This one is absolutely brilliant! The reviewer forgot to mention some very funny farting sounds, almost a solo!</a>
<a>
A very eclectic French underground album. It starts off with a perverted,
avant-garde waltz and after, they take you on a rollercoaster of styles. A
dazzling collage of seemingly contradicting musical forms comes along. Among
them are Soft Machine-styled jazz rock, chamber rock, French chanson, gypsy
music, a touch of Zappa, folky parts and psychedelic acid-rock. Despite the
experimental, uncompromising atmosphere, the concept in its entirety works
excellently, in my opinion. The concept of the album as a whole is probably
best compared to the early Mothers of Invention albums, although Zappa's
collage style was infused with different musical influences (no Varese,
doo-wop or free jazz influences on Komintern's album). The diversity of
styles and the occasional goofiness may get on some people's nerves, but I
think that
Le Bal du Rat Mort is an excellent and unique album.

Gnosis2000</a>



I am enjoying this as well.

It is on the ZART list and I hope to add it to PA (in my French "invasion" plan).


    
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 17 2007 at 17:43
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